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“The Broken Covenant and the Unjust Steward” in GR 35840

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“The Broken Covenant and the Unjust Steward” in GR 35840

The case of Bastida v. Menzi & Co., Inc., decided in March 1933, unfolds not merely as a commercial dispute but as a modern parable of broken covenant and fiduciary betrayal. Plaintiff Francisco Bastida’s complaint, detailing a 1922 contract for the exploitation of fertilizers, establishes a foundational pact-a commercial covenant meant to bind parties in mutual enterprise. Like the biblical stewards entrusted with their master’s talents, Bastida alleges he performed his duty, superintending the work, only to have the fruits of the labor usurped. The corporate structure, with J.M. Menzi’s family controlling ninety-nine percent of the stock, mirrors the ancient power dynamics where the powerful householder, through his agents, reinterprets agreements to dispossess the lesser partner. The legal pleading thus becomes a lament, a cry for justice against those who, having sworn by the contract, now seek to void its spirit for their own gain.

This narrative deepens into a literary exploration of obscured truth and procedural delay. The case, tried on amended pleadings from 1928, reveals a struggle over interpretation-a battle between the letter and the spirit of the law. The defendant corporation, through its counsel, embodies the archetype of the sophistic opponent, using legal forms and corporate veils to cloud the original promise. Just as Jacob served seven years for Rachel only to be given Leah, Bastida’s complaint suggests a bait-and-switch, where his labor and innovation are absorbed into the corporate entity, only for the terms of reward to be disputed and denied. The court record itself, with its dry recitation of “FIRST CAUSE OF ACTION,” becomes the scroll upon which this drama of alleged bad faith is inscribed, demanding a judge to play the role of a Solomon, discerning the rightful claimant from the crafty dissembler.

Ultimately, the Supreme Court’s engagement with this appeal in 1933 places it in the role of a divine tribunal, weighing the evidence of broken oaths. The moment of decision-March, in the depths of the global Great Depression-adds a layer of existential stakes, where a ruling for the individual against the corporate Goliath would affirm that economic power does not eclipse moral covenant. The case transcends its specifics to ask a perennial question: Can the structures of human law, with their amendments and appeals, restore what was lost when a handshake deal, a signed contract, is rendered hollow? The final judgment would determine whether Bastida’s story ended as a psalm of justice or a proverb of worldly disillusionment.


SOURCE: GR 35840; (March, 1933)